Maple 6 — __link__
No other CAS at that price point could perform that combination of exponential and trigonometric Laplace transforms without manual simplification. The inttrans package in Maple 6 was a masterpiece of algorithmic coding.
However, if you are a historian of computing, a nostalgic mathematician, or an engineer maintaining a legacy model, is a gem. It represents a specific moment in time when symbolic computation became democratized. It is the Model T Ford of computer algebra systems—not the fastest, not the safest, but the one that proved the entire concept could work beautifully for everyone. maple 6
For engineering students, the linalg package (deprecated in later versions but fully functional in Maple 6) was a gift. Maple 6 allowed symbolic matrix manipulation—things like HilbertMatrix(6) or computing Jordan forms symbolically—with a speed that felt instantaneous on a Pentium III processor. The introduction of the LinearAlgebra package (which coexisted with linalg ) gave users modern naming conventions and faster numeric routines using LAPACK algorithms. No other CAS at that price point could